Social Security Break-Even Age Falls at 77-81 as Average Benefit Reaches $2,081
Updated
Updated · IndexBox, Inc. · May 17
Social Security Break-Even Age Falls at 77-81 as Average Benefit Reaches $2,081
3 articles · Updated · IndexBox, Inc. · May 17
$2,081 was the average monthly Social Security retirement benefit in April, as a new report outlined how retirees can calculate the age when delaying or starting claims pays off.
For workers born in 1960 or later, full retirement age is 67, while claims can start at 62 or be delayed until 70; earlier filing cuts monthly checks, and waiting raises them.
The report said the break-even age for claiming at 62 versus delaying often lands between 77 and 81, while waiting from 67 to 70 pushes that threshold closer to 82.
my Social Security accounts can provide personalized benefit estimates, helping workers judge whether a longer expected lifespan makes delaying benefits financially worthwhile.
The analysis also cautioned against relying too heavily on break-even age alone when deciding when to claim, though it did not specify the reasons.
With Social Security facing cuts, is delaying benefits for a bigger payout now a dangerous gamble?
How does the projected 2033 shortfall upend the traditional 'break-even' age calculation for new retirees?